Conventional Half-Heusler Alloys Advance State-of-the-Art Thermoelectric Properties
Mousumi Mitra, Allen Benton, Md Sabbir Akhanda, Jie Qi, Mona, Zebarjadi, David J. Singh, S. Joseph Poon

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that traditional alloying of conventional HfZr-based Half-Heusler alloys can significantly enhance thermoelectric performance, achieving a ZT near 1.5 through doping and microstructural control, offering a simple route to high-efficiency thermoelectric materials.
Contribution
It reveals that conventional alloying techniques can produce high ZT in standard Half-Heusler alloys, challenging the notion that complex nanostructuring is necessary for high thermoelectric performance.
Findings
Achieved ZT ~1.5 at 980 K in Hf0.3Zr0.7CoSn0.3Sb0.7 with minimal Al doping.
Enhanced power factor by approximately 65%.
Reduced thermal conductivity by about 13%.
Abstract
Half-Heusler (HH) phases have garnered much attention as thermally stable and non-toxic thermoelectric materials for power conversion. The most studied alloys to date utilize Hf, Zr, and Ti as the base components. These alloys can achieve a moderate dimensionless figure of merit, ZT, near 1. Recent studies have advanced the thermoelectric performance of HH alloys by employing nanostructures and novel compositions to achieve larger ZT, reaching as high as 1.5. Herein, we report that traditional alloying techniques applied to the conventional HfZr-based half-Heusler alloys can also lead to exceptional ZT. Specifically, we present the well-studied p-type Hf0.3Zr0.7CoSn0.3Sb0.7, previously reported to have a ZT~0.8, resonantly doped with less than 1 at. % metallic Al on the Sn/Sb site, touting a remarkable ZT near 1.5 at 980 K. This is achieved through a significant increase in power…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeusler alloys: electronic and magnetic properties · Advanced Thermoelectric Materials and Devices · MXene and MAX Phase Materials
